The Authors
Search this blog
Categories
Archives
-
Recent Posts
- No chatbots please, we’re scientists
- Golden spike or no golden spike – we are living in the Anthropocene
- We are late bending the climate change curve – but bending it still matters
- The changing picture of the Martian core
- Rivers might not need plants to meander
- Has Earth’s mantle always worked like it does today?
- How the UK’s tectonic past is key to its seismic present
- A new recipe for Large Igneous Provinces: just add BIF, then wait a couple of hundred million years
-
Recent Comments
For lot's more videos on soil moisture topics, see Drs Selker and Or's text-book support videos https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoMb5YOZuaGtn8pZyQMSLuQ/playlists
[…] Announcing STORMS | Highly Allochthonous on Recent News […]
Category Archives: public science
Geobloggers for DonorsChoose: Deep Sea News
During Earth Science Week, your friendly Highly Allochthonous Bloggers are supporting the
Geobloggers for Donorschoose: Maitri Erwin
Continuing our campaign to promote geoscience education during Earth Science Week, today we give you Maitri Erwin, who has thrown herself enthusiastically into this years DonorsChoose Science Bloggers for Students challenge as part of the Ocean and Geobloggers Collective. As … Continue reading
Geobloggers for DonorsChoose: Jacquelyn Gill
It’s a good week to promote geoscience education. Not only is it Earth Science Week, but science bloggers everywhere are involved in their annual drive to provide much needed educational resources to US schoolteachers through DonorsChoose. Forcing schools to beg … Continue reading
Why does a compass point north? A mystery at the heart of the story of science (book review)
Strange as it might seem, I’m finding North Pole, South Pole, paleomagnetist Gillian Turner’s newly published account of “the epic quest to solve the great mystery of Earth’s magnetism”, a difficult book to review. It’s not that I didn’t enjoy … Continue reading
If you’re waiting for an earthquake warning, you’re doing it wrong
The magnitude 6.3 earthquake that stuck central Italy near the city of L’Aquila in April 2009 killed more than 300 people, made tens of thousands more homeless, and caused billions of Euros’ worth of damage. No-one could have predicted exactly … Continue reading
Nice plan for content warnings on Mastodon and the Fediverse. Now you need a Mastodon/Fediverse button on this blog.